Life in the city feels like a pressure cooker in Faudel’s “Il Y A.” Flames in his eyes, concrete “golden prisons,” and nightly violence paint a picture of urban chaos where hearts have grown deaf. Yet, instead of drowning in despair, the singer repeats a stubborn belief: Il y a… there IS a better world out there for you and for me. The song bounces between frustration — everything moves trop vite (too fast), people burn out, indifference gnaws — and a contagious hope that things can change if we wait for each other and move forward together.
Think of it as a rallying cry hidden inside a dance track. Faudel urges us to peel away the artificial lights and “rêves de ciel artificiel,” face the emptiness head-on, and refuse the traps society sets. His promise? If we hold on to our shared humanity, follow the “star” that guides us, and dance without forgetting why we dance, we can build that brighter place. The song’s upbeat rhythm therefore becomes an act of resistance — a joyful refusal to accept the status quo and an invitation to imagine something better, side by side.